Thomas J. Arnold liked an update for The Traveller’s Cup

Well, here it is. The last day of the Nerdist contest is upon us. 

Currently we need 100 more orders to win. This is the last chance. 

In your support can you reach out to a family member? A friend? A colleague? In a society filled with book enthusiasts we should be able to find people to get excited about this project. 

But it’s going to take a personal effort. We’ve spammed social media to death, but have we been messaging our friends and acquaintances? And for those of you who have, let’s send out reminders that today is the last day. Every order counts.

What happens if we don’t win?
That’s a question I’m trying not to think too hard about. Short answer, it’s not the end of the line. We essentially get an extension via Inkshares to the end of May to gain 750 pre-orders for the same result (editing, publishing, marketing, distribution), just outside the Nerdist collection. At 250 we still get to publish under Inkshares, but without all these lovely services. So we get some breathing room, but the challenge increases. And I don’t know about you, but I’d like to close this campaign successfully tomorrow. 

Your-Nervously-Fidgety-Space-Captain,
-AC

 

ps: happy pi day

pps: hand sketch today because my tablet was being unhelpful




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    Thomas J. Arnold liked an update for Suffrage - The First World Key

    We hit 150 readers/supporters. 150 people of exquisite taste. Nice. I think that deserves a surprise.

    Have some more story.
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      Thomas J. Arnold liked an update for The Catcher’s Trap

      Hello Friends!!

      It has been a while! So I thought I give you an update on the world of The Catcher’s Trap

      The production process is moving steadily. Last week I received my manuscript back from the developmental editor, and I’m working hard on the revisions. Many thanks to Ryan Boudinot for his thoughtful editing, his honesty and his words of encouragement.

      Funny thing. Apparently my straight main character spends too much time talking about other male characters’ bodies and outfits, which, I’ve been told, most straight men don’t do. Lol, that’s the beauty of developmental edits. Your editor sees things you don’t.

      The back cover copy is done and ready to go, and I’m expecting to get the first round of front cover concepts by the end of the week.  All exciting stuff.

      The e-book will be out the same day of my husband’s birthday! October 8th. Which I take as a good omen sent to me from the multiverse.

      In the meantime:

      • If you want to support LGBTQ authors and allies in Inkshares, join my Write Out Loud Syndicate.
      • If you are one of the followers who hasn’t pre-order a copy of the book yet, let me know what I can do to help you make up your mind.
      • Finally, follow me on twitter @RHfromTheGlen or join the conversation on Facebook.

      Have a wonderful week!!


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        Thomas J. Arnold liked an update for To Live and Die in Avalon

        Hello readers and followers!

        Rather than send a mass email, I’m going to use the update readers function to get the word out about the cover art magnets! If you have already pre-ordered my book and would like to receive a cover art magnet, please email me back at split0@gmail.com with your mailing address and I’ll send you one for each copy you ordered! 

        If you would like a magnet and haven’t pre-ordered yet, please order TODAY and I will get one out to you! My thank you email has already been adjusted to ask for mailing info. 

        Also, don’t forget that I am producing high-quality prints of the Penny portrait by Nathan Anderson for my top referrers. I will be giving those away if and when I get into Quill, so help me get there, spread the word, talk my book up to everyone you know!

        Thanks again for the support! Chapter 5 should be up soon!

        -Jason

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          Thomas J. Arnold followed Elena Stofle
          Elena Stofle
          Inkshares’ Customer Service Extraordinaire, if I do say so myself. ...
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          Thomas J. Arnold liked the forum thread, In the morning I'm making waffles (with some rant on the side)
          I’m going to waffle on here about a few topics: writing a book, credit swapping, and Inkshares business model.

          I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again. I’m not a natural author. I don’t consider myself a writer, but a storyteller. It comes from my gaming background. The ability to think quickly on the fly, the ability to plan and anticipate what the rats inside your maze might do. These are the things that make a good GM  - but only some of those skills transfer over to being a writer and it’s been a steep learning curve.

          To calm the voice in my head from a story that just wouldn’t shut up, I made the decision to tell this story to a significantly broader audience than just a few friends. I started not knowing what medium that was. Graphic novel? Write it as a script? Write it as a novel? I honestly had no idea, and someone said write it as a novel and then it can be anything. Enter Nanowrimo and a co-author - and now I have something, Something that really excites me. Something that I can see the shape and feel the texture. Something I think that will excite others.

          So now I just need to find them and I chose Inkshares. Like many here, I’m not exactly flush with lots of friends and family that can financially support the project, certainly not enough to get it into production given the target.

          So what to do?

          I looked at novel swaps - and have done a few, but honestly, it feels icky. I can’t tell if people doing the swapping are genuinely interested in the project, or just doing it it to get one order closer to that magic threshold. The whole business of getting credits revolves around referrals. So, am I meant to spam the people who’ve been kind enough to follow the project with constant referrals? (Sure feels that way given the number of recommendation messages I get - 300 recommendations in a week?!?!). You know what? I don’t care about credits. When I get them, great, I’ll go look for something to support. Will I attempt to spam refer and novel swap? No, no I will not.

          I’ve used my credits in the goodwill train on projects that I’m genuinely interested in. I’ve made rare referrals, on things I genuinely want to see made into a book, but I’m over credits.

          As an author I don’t need credits, I don’t need to waste time jumping through hoops to try and get them so I can somehow game the system. I need access to an audience of people who will genuinely want to see my project come to fruition.

          What would I like to see?
          It’s harder than I thought to connect to readers on the Inkshares site. A big part of that is my fault. I need to write a synopsis that doesn’t give away the plot bunnies and sounds engaging enough to have someone plonk down some dollars on the hope that one day this will be an actual book. At the moment its a half-assed job, but I’ve been so busy in doing the edits and getting to that wow this is really exciting stage that its fallen by the wayside. It’s something I’ll work on shortly, but the crucial thing here is time. I don’t have enough of it. I imagine I’m not alone in this. 

          Part of this is Inkshares fault. The way the system is now, I don’t know if I am wasting what little precious time I have or not. I know they are a new startup and still figuring out this whole hybrid model of publishing, but the current model and process is making things harder.

          I read some of the content in the recent Reddit Q&A and there was an interesting stat in there. At present there are about 10 readers for every author project (and they are working to increase this to 100:1 or 1000:1). Cool - that’s what this author needs, an audience, it’s what every author  here is looking for.

          So lets look at the readers, do an example, and click on Thaddeus Woodman. When I click on Thaddeus I’m looking for clues to whether or not Thad would like the project enough to plonk down some money. What clues have I got? He has some text under his name - Great! (many times it’s blank, or has a generic ’an avid reader’).

          Cofounder of Inkshares; producer of code and books.  Questions about Inkshares? Email me: thad@inkshares.com - Okay that doesn’t tell me whether he’d like my book, or whether I’d waste my time in pitching him. Ooh he has some circles on his picture indicating he’s supported other books - Great! Hovering over each of these tells me what these projects are.

          Blasted by Adversity, Slim and the Beast, the cats Pyjama’s, Abomination, The future of men.   Are any of those in my genre?

          I go look at each one Memoir, fiction narrative, childrens book, historical fantasy, non-fiction book.  Not looking good.  

          Then I can go through his recent history - Ooh he followed a sci-fi! and when I look on the right hand side, he’s recommended one as well. 

          So maybe he’d be interested in my project. Pitch.

          How much time did that take? 

          Now let’s put on our time travelling hat and travel into the future where Inkshares is a thousand times bigger. While now there is likely to be far more people who will like my book, I still have to find them...somehow. I still have to laboriously pan for flecks of possible reader gold in the muddy water.

          Suggestions
          Credits
          I don’t care about credits - it makes me wonder what your reasoning was in introducing them in the first place. It’s free money, and it just makes people nuts. What did you think would happen when you throw suitcases of filthy cash into the air in a crowded place? 

          As an Author I don’t want credits, give them to Readers, ONLY to readers. More cashed up readers = good. More cashed up authors desperate to get their novel published = ticket to crazy town.

          Pay me when the book reaches target, and make that process as easy as possible. 

          If you HAVE to give me credits - give me something I can gift as a prize to my loyal followers.  Have Author Credits - transferable and Readers Credits - purchasable.

          Readers
          It would be far more time efficient to find an audience if I knew what genre of books readers liked. Sure, can’t hold a gun to their head and force them to tell us, but Inkshares should make it easy for Readers to connect to Authors. 

          Send out a survey, (reward participation with Reader Credits), find out what genre they want to read and pass this info on to Authors. Feed us pitches, feed us leads, we are trying to SELL something after all.

           A searchable option for authors to FIND those people would be amazing and save enormous time and effort...especially when Inkshares gets much bigger.
           
          Okay - Waffles and rant over.  Back to editing.

          Julian
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          People who have liked this comment in the forum thread, In the morning I'm making waffles (with some rant on the side)

            Thomas J. Arnold liked an update for Murder at the Veterans’ Club


            We have a spiffing new letterhead. Marvellous, isn’t it?

            One more week before the pre-order sales campaign goes live. It’s so exciting I spent the last six hours failing to type this up. I did manage, however, to upload another Peterkin short mystery onto Wattpad: "The Thirteenth Rule", which is set just a little later than the stories I’ve uploaded so far. 1931, to be exact. It’s also less of a whodunnit and more of a whydunnit. Enjoy.

            I’d like to take this opportunity to talk about JF Dubeau’s second novel, "A God in the Shed". Honestly, I think this beats his first novel. I’ve described it elsewhere as "a little bit Lovecraft, a little bit Twin Peaks", and I’m not sure I can sum it up better than that. The characters felt real and distinct from the moment I met them, and the world appropriately familiar. If you haven’t picked this up yet, I suggest you do so.

            I’d also like to mention "Judith", by Zack Budryk, which just caught my eye today. It sold me within the first four paragraphs, with the easy flow of its prose and the way the personality of the viewpoint character is deftly and effortlessly conveyed. This will be a novel well worth getting, I think.

            And that’s the news for this week. When next I post an update, it will be to announce the opening of the pre-order sales campaign. Until then, ladies and gentlemen!

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              Thomas J. Arnold liked an update for Lucky

              Dear Readers,

              Just time for a quick update before I have to go do my dishes (yay for responsibilities, am I right?).

              FIRST: Chapter Seven has been uploaded! This is the last chapter I will be uploading before the end of the Nerdist contest so...ENJOY!

              SECOND: I’m still waiting on a few more purchases before AC Weston and I raffle off ten FREE copies of her novel, She Is The End. Don’t hesitate if you want a copy of this wonderful novel!

              THIRD AND MOST IMPORTANTLY: We are still 75 copies short of where we need to be to win the Nerdist Space Opera Contest! There is only the remainder of today, Monday and Tuesday to make your purchase count for the contest. I am the point of imploring each of you - $10 from each person receiving this update will push us over that ledge into success!

              If you haven’t purchased yet, I want to know what I can do to help you make that decision, either to preorder or not. Let me know via email (adrian.babst@gmail.com - yes, it’s me. Webster is a pen name) or on Twitter (@RH_Webster) or Facebook (www.facebook.com/RHWebster.ScienceFiction). I am keeping a close eye on all of these and will be trying to respond to each of you as quickly as possible.

              In return, I will tell you all the fun story about how where the name RH Webster came from. It’s a rip roaring tale about...a kid, a missed homework assignment, and a stairwell.

              - Webster

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                Thomas J. Arnold sent an update for Exile, Magus

                Just checking in with a brief update. Today is my 6th day off work in 6 weeks, so it has been more than a bit hectic. I continue working on various materials for and relating to Exile, Magus, but due to the time constraints of my work schedule and the general physical exhaustion it brings on that work has been slow. There’s a silver lining though. Based on what was said in our Thursday meeting we’re going to be able to stop the excessive overtime for at least the next few months, maybe even until the end of this season. The slow down is kicking off in a big way for me since I’ll have a 3 day weekend this coming week as well as another 3 day weekend the following week. That means I’ll have as much time off in these next 2 weeks as I did in the past month and a half! Even after that we’re scheduled to be back to a normal 5 day work week, so I’ll actually have time to get things accomplished.

                With all this time off rapidly approaching my brain is swimming with all the (currently unpaid but loved deeply by me) work that I’ve been having to put on the backburner and/or creep slowly into. I’m having a hard time deciding just what to focus on first, which means I’ll probably be skipping between projects maniacally the entire time. The only thing set in stone in my mind is that I will finally complete some beta-readings I’d promised to do. You may also be wondering if this means I’ll be getting back to Sunday reviews. Probably not since I’ve built up such a large backlog of other things I need to do at this point.

                The main announcement on the Exile, Magus front at this point is that I’ve decided to start an email newsletter to more directly keep in contact with and update everyone interested on my progress. In addition to the status updates each month, I’m starting a monthly newsletter. It will mainly be detailing the progress which has been made each previous month, but I also intend to include exclusive, sneak peek content such as maps, short stories, bits of background lore about my world and its people, and so on. I’ve already sent out an email to those of you who I have email addresses for, but for the rest of you feel free to email me at redtom.mythmaker@gmail.com if you also want to sign up for the newsletter. I want to make this more of an interactive matter than the typical newsletter, so also feel free to include any comments/feedback or requests for newsletter content when you message me to sign up. Here’s hoping I hear from the lot of you.


                Final bit for today is solely on the current contest. I have been watching it(especially during the craziness of these last few days) with all the rapt attention that most folks reserve for sporting events. I’m not much of a sports fan myself, but a literary race for the top just turns me into a whooping, screaming, and often nonsensical superfan. So of course I’ve picked out favorites, those books which move beyond the realm of “I really want to read this book” into “OMG I must read this book!”

                Unfortunately some of those have dropped below the top 10, and thus are not likely to make it. There are however 3 remaining which are in truth my dream team of winners which are currently still high in the rankings. I realize that I will likely not get to see all 3 of them in the final winner’s circle, but I can still dream!

                Anyway, the 3 books I would most like to see finish in the top 3 are(in no particular order)

                “The Life Interstellar” by Zack Jordan

                “The Traveller’s Cup” by AC Baldwin

                “Lucky” by RH Webster

                Ultimately though I just have to say good job to those of you in this contest. Even if you didn’t get named to my own personal top 3, there’s a pretty good chance that you’ve caught my eye because this top 10 is filled with great choices (not to mention all of the great choices that aren’t currently on the top 10).


                That’s all I’ve got for this week. I’ve got to do lowly human chores such as laundry and house cleaning now. This place has reached nearly full blown clutter mode during these hectic few weeks and I fear what may be hiding under the piles of clothes or behind the empty Cheerwine bottles. Enjoy what’s left of your weekend and keep reading!

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                  Thomas J. Arnold recommended Lucky
                  This one has wonderfully developed characters, and very believable tech. It promises for some great science fiction, so give it a look.
                  Lucky
                  Lucky was going home when she’s suddenly in the middle of an interstellar conspiracy. Who can she trust when she doesn’t know anyone?
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